Doctors Craik and Dick's Account of Washington's
Last Illness and Death
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On December 31, 1799, Timothy Green's Fredericksburg
newspaper, the Virginia Herald, printed an account of the death of
George Washington that was written by doctors James Craik and
Elisha Dick on December 21, 1799. This was the only public account
of Washington's death until Tobias Lear's
detailed account was published later. The following account is
taken from Paul Leicester Ford's edition of Washington's
Writings.
Alexandria 21 December 1799
Some time in the night of Friday, the 10th instant, having been
exposed to a rain on the preceding day, General Washington was
attacked with an inflammatory affection of the upper part of the
windpipe, called in technical language Cynache Trachealis. The
disease commenced with a violent ague, accompanied with some pain
in the upper and forepart of the throat, a sense of stricture in
the same part, a cough, and a difficult, rather than painful
deglutition, which was soon succeeded by fever and a quick and
laborious respiration. The necessity of blood-letting suggesting
itself to the General, he procured a bleeder in the neighborhood,
who took from his arm in the night twelve or fourteen ounces of
blood. He could not by any means be prevailed on by the family to
send for the attending physician till the following morning, who
arrived at Mount Vernon at about 11 o'clock on Saturday. Discovering
the case to be highly alarming, and foreseeing the
fatal tendency of the disease, two consulting physicians were
immediately sent for, who arrived, one at half after three, and the
other at four o'clock in the afternoon: in the mean time were
employed two pretty copious bleedings, a blister was applied to the
part affected, two moderate doses of calomel were administered,
which operated on the lower intestines, but all without any
perceptible advantage, the respiration becoming still more
difficult and distressing. Upon the arrival of the first of the
consulting physicians, it was agreed, as there were yet no signs of
accumulation in the bronchial vessels of the lungs, to try the
result of another bleeding, when about thirty-two ounces of blood
were drawn, without the smallest apparent alleviation of the
disease. Vapours of vinegar and water were frequently inhaled, ten
grains of calomel were given, succeeded by repeated doses of emetic
tartar, amounting in all to five or six grains, with no other
effect than a copious discharge from the bowels. The powers of
life seemed now manifestly yielding to the force of the disorder;
blisters were applied to the extremities, together with a cataplasm
of bran and vinegar to the throat. Speaking, which was painful
from the beginning, now became almost impracticable; respiration
grew more and more contracted and imperfect, till half after 11 on
Saturday night, retaining the full possession of his intellect--when
he expired without a struggle.
He was fully impressed at the beginning of his complaint, as
well as through every succeeding stage of it, that its conclusion
would be mortal; submitting to the several exertions made for his
recovery, rather as a duty, than from any expectation of their
efficacy. He considered the operations of death upon his system as
coeval with the disease; and several hours before his death, after
repeated efforts to be understood, succeeded in expressing a desire
that he might be permitted to die without further interruption.
During the short period of his illness, he economized his
time, in the arrangement of such few concerns as required his
attention, with the utmost serenity; and anticipated his
approaching dissolution with every demonstration of that equanimity
for which his whole life has been so uniformly and singularly
conspicuous.
James Craik.
Attending Physician.
Elisha C. Dick,
Consulting Physician
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